Our offbeat wedding at a glance: I wore a black dress and Mark wore leather armour. Our ceremony was a Pagan-influenced handfasting with six cords. We had an uneven bridal party and the bridesmaids wore capes! There were no flowers, so my bridesmaids carried censers with smoking incense, while I carried a lantern I bought in a market in Turkey. We tied the knot at sunset in a natural park surrounded by tall trees, handmade paper lanterns, and LED lights scattered to form the aisle.

We followed that with a reception in my aunt's back garden, which we had decked out Turkish Bedouin-style. Rugs on the ground, floor cushions, Moroccan lanterns, and hay bales covered in Turkish tablecloths.

Guests were led in through the garden path by fire dancers, who later performed a feature show. With help from family and friends, we made all of the decorations, seating, and tables.

I sculpted our cake toppers, which we revealed only just before cutting the cake. Our food was wok catering made fresh in front of everyone, served in noodle boxes. We had a belly dancer and a photo booth, and had guests throw streamers over us during our first dance.

Tell us about the ceremony: We put the ceremony together using variations of several different handfasting ceremonies that we had found. We used six cords and made a promise to each other with each binding. We had a circle marked in rose petals that we asked guests to step into, and we marked the beginning with a candle lighting ceremony. The bridesmaids were each assigned a direction (marked by a burning torch) where they stood and offered their blessings.

We also included the following lines:

Marriage, according to law in Australia, is the union of a man and a woman, to the exclusion of all others, voluntarily entered into for life [this part is the legal requirement for marriage in Australia]. Lara and Mark hope that one day this is a right that will be allowed for all couples, regardless of gender.

Others would ask at this time "who gives this bride in marriage," but as a woman is not property to be bought or sold, given or taken, I ask simply if you come of your own will and accord.

Our biggest challenge: The first was coming to terms with sticker shock. I had thought that since we wanted to do things so differently, we wouldn't be going through regular wedding vendors and wouldn't get as much of a mark-up. However, it can cost even more if you want to be different. [This is a good reminder for anyone who thinks "offbeat" is synonymous with "low-budget." -Editors]

After the shock wore off, we did some calculations and decided that with clever buying, borrowing, and making, we could do the whole lot much cheaper ourselves. We made the coffee tables and tablecloths, we brought back lots of lanterns, rugs, and cushion covers from our trip overseas, and used hay bales as some of the seating. We collected furniture and cushions from secondhand stores, eBay, and op shops.

My favorite moment: Our vows and ceremony wording were carefully put together to ensure that we meant every word we said. I don't believe in making grandiose promises about "'til death do us part." Instead we spoke of our hope for our love to last forever, and made personal promises we will endeavour to keep whilst recognising that happy marriages require hard work and compromise.

For me personally, walking down the aisle and seeing, at last, all our ideas put together: the aisle lit with scattered LED throwies, the sun setting with pink clouds, all our friends and family holding their candles, Mark waiting for me at the edge of the circle, and the lanterns that my wonderful bridesmaid made. It looked amazing.

My funniest moment: As part of our ceremony, we had each of the four bridesmaids (standing as the Cardinals of North, South, East, and West) issue a challenge. This meant when the celebrant announced, "If any would ask why these two should not be joined, let them stand before those assembled here and speak now," the bridesmaids stepped forward and each asked their questions.

Only the bridal party knew that this was part of the ceremony, so our guests got quite a shock when the first bridesmaid spoke up. She was referred to as the "troublemaker" for the rest of the evening!

We also got lost on the way, which was not so funny at the time since we couldn't be late due to the ceremony being right at dusk. My bridesmaid used her phone to work out where to go without realising she had it set to "walking directions." The GPS tried to get us to drive through a park! We then ended up going a back way with lots of windy roads and arrived feeling carsick, but at least right on time. As soon as I stepped out of the car and saw everyone waiting, I felt instantly better.

Was there anything you were sure was going to be a total disaster that unexpectedly turned out great? About two weeks before the wedding, we found out that the lady who had been paid to make our cake had closed shop and done a runner with everyone's money. We had no money left in the budget to replace it. Since I had spent weeks working on sculpting our own cake toppers, we went to a small cake wholesaler and ordered three small cakes, just so the toppers would have something to sit on. The cakes didn't look fancy but they were delicious.

We were also very worried about the weather. It stormed the day before, and whilst we had a back-up plan, I really didn't want to have to use it. We got lucky though because the weather was perfect.

My advice for offbeat brides: If your wedding involves lots of DIY, be organised early on. If you're relying on other people to do things, make lots of schedules and lists, but don't be surprised if they don't actually read them.

What was the most important lesson you learned from your wedding? They say that marriage doesn't change anything, and I expected that. But there actually has been a subtle change. Because the vows and promises we made were sincere, we think about them often and our relationship is stronger as a result. I'm glad we worked so hard to make the day about us and our specific strengths.

Makes me miss the days when my hair used to be able to achieve that shade of red. Alas with time and over-proccesing, it just won't keep red. Completely stunning look though with the black dress and creamy skin!

Oops, sorry about those last 2 images. I added more photos to my flickr account via Lightroom, 2 must have been repeats and for some reason it deleted them from the set. I've put them back, but you guys must have done the links already! Sorry!

Oh. Wow. Everything about this makes me feel all weak and trembly with awesome. The CLOAKS, the lanterns, the handfasting, the belly dance, the FIRE, the whole damn gothiness of it, AND The Islander in your wedding video. You deserve all the happiness in the world for being so kick-ass

Oh wow Lara, that is amazing… I knew your wedding would be fantastic but those pics are just WOW!!! Three months to go tomorrow for me and have been feeling nervous about my black dress, thank you so much for sharing your pics and giving me confidence again about how much black wedding dresses rock!!! congratulations again!!

Sorry for the slow reply, Here's the wording from that part of the ceremony –

We are gathered in this sacred place to join this man and this woman, life
to life and spirit to spirit. If any would ask why these two should not be joined, let them stand
before those assembled here and speak now.

North voice: "I would speak. Do you have the means to support yourselves and
to provide for your worldly needs?"

Do you?

Couple: "We do."

West: "I would speak. Do you love one another? Do you like one
another?"

Do you?

Couple: "We do."

South voice: "I would speak. Do you have the will to argue, if you must, to
air your problems, then stand together against adversity?"

Do you?

Couple: "We do."

East voice: "I would speak. Do you share your thoughts and ideas, burdens and
dreams?"

You are gorgeous and your wedding is gorgeous! I was just starting to look for a celebrant (and I live on the Gold Coast!) and I am meeting with your celebrant on Tuesday! Perfect timing for your feature!

2 things…1st: You are a great looking couple and had a fantastic wedding. 2nd: I hope that since then there has been a way to have look out for the cake vendor and have her stopped/ charged whatever. You made the most of things. Best Wishes

This is just amazing! I'm planning our wedding/handfasting and you have really inspired me! I've just realized a couple days ago that I would be in front of an audience, basically, and that has been scarring the shit out me! Even almost making me dread the ceremony part, but reading about your day has actually helped calm me and put my mind back at ease and on track. Thank you!

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